Your Teenager Can Outrun You

I simply walked outside after we had a fight, and she followed. I walked faster and so did she. I ran. She ran. The faster she came after me, the harder and faster I ran away. My mom is actually one of the fastest runners I know, so it didn’t take me long to figure out I was going to have to do some ducking and weaving. I finally eluded her by hiding behind a sign. I still remember looking out from behind that sign, watching my mom search for me. I didn’t know where to go. I hadn’t planned on leaving, but really, what choice did I have? She made me run.

For the past ten years, I have spent countless hours with high school students, and some things never change. The harder you chase them the faster they will run away—especially if they believe that you are limiting their freedom.

Maybe you aren’t a physical runner. But with technology, there are all kinds of new ways to chase after your kid.

You can put an alarm system on your doors and windows—but they will learn to go out through the top of the window without setting off your alarm.

You can put a GPS in their car that will tell you exactly where they go—but they will park at a friend’s house and have someone pick them up.

You can install a tracking app on their phone so you can monitor all the incoming and outgoing messages—but they will download Snapchat and communicate more than you ever want to know about.

Is that terrifying? Absolutely! I have a preschooler and two elementary schoolers, and I already know how hard it can be to sit back and watch them climb the jungle gym without my help when I know they could fall and hurt themselves. Don’t you wish you still had my problems!

But here is what I hope someone will remind me when my kids get older:

They are good kids—They are. And so are yours. Honestly, most teenagers I work with don’t want to be bad or make dumb choices.

You will never know everything they do— or everywhere they go, or everyone they date, or everything they say. Did your parents know everything you did when you were a teenager?

They are going to make mistakes— They are going to make choices that will have natural consequences. Letting them face consequences now will help prepare them. Remember, they are becoming adults. And before long, they will have to do it on their own.

If I could talk to the parents of every teenager I have been connected with over the past ten years, I would say this: You can’t control them. And if you chase after them, nine times out of ten they will run faster and harder in the very direction you don’t want them to go. It’s not because they are bad. It’s because they need freedom. They crave it. They will do anything for it.

I haven’t even experienced what it’s like to parent a teenager, and I don’t pretend that I will be very good at it when I get there. But here’s my observation:

You won’t know everything, but you can listen to what they are willing to share.

You can’t control them, but you can be honest with them about your fears and your hopes.

You can’t ultimately protect them, but you can love them through every mistake.

Kristen Ivy is the Executive Director of Messaging at Orange and co-author of "Playing For Keeps", "Creating a Lead Small Culture", and "It’s Just a Phase - So Don't Miss It". She combines her degree in secondary education with a Master of Divinity and lives out the full Orange spectrum as the wife of XP3 Students Orange Specialist, Matt Ivy, and the mother of three children, Sawyer, Hensley, and Raleigh.

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We want to remind you why what you do is so important. To help you focus on what matters most. To discover parenting along with you, so you know you’re not in this alone. Not all at once. Just little by little. So week by week, we will cue you so you can make the most of the weeks you have with your kids before graduation.